Child support order and payment amounts have implications for the economic well-being of noncustodial parents, custodial parents, and children. Most noncustodial parents with a child support order pay part, but not the full amount of that order; likewise, most custodial parents who are owed child support receive some support, but not the full amount they are owed.

Satisfaction with Child Support Agency Services and Its Relationship to Child Support Payments
- Daniel R. Meyer, Yoona Kim, and Maria Cancian
- Report
- October 2019

Child Support Enforcement Tools and Their Relationship to Payments: A Review of County Policy and Practice
- Lisa Klein Vogel
- Report
- September 2019

Challenges and Opportunities for Engaging Noncustodial Parents in Employment and Other Services
- Lisa Klein Vogel
- Report
- September 2019

Barriers to Child Support Payment
- Lawrence Berger, Maria Cancian, Angela Guarin, Leslie Hodges, and Daniel R. Meyer
- Report
- August 2019

Recent Changes to State Child Support Guidelines for Low-Income Noncustodial Parents
- Leslie Hodges and Lisa Klein Vogel
- Report
- August 2019

Child Support Payments, Income Imputation, and Default Orders
- Maria Cancian, Steven Cook, and Daniel R. Meyer
- Report
- August 2019

The Use of Child Support Guidelines in Wisconsin: 2010 and 2013
- Leslie Hodges and Steven T. Cook
- Report
- August 2019

Culture change: Implementing a new approach to child support
- Jennifer L. Noyes, Lisa Klein Vogel, and Lanikque Howard
- Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
- July 2019

Do low-income noncustodial fathers “trade” earlier families for newer ones?
- Lawrence M. Berger, Maria Cancian, Angela Guarin, and Daniel R. Meyer
- Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
- July 2019

Helping the hard-To-Employ transition to employment
- Fast Focus Policy Brief
- July 2019